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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

December 02, 1916 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1916-12-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

CHIGAN DAILY

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Treat Yourself To A
Ne/v Suit
or overcoat for Xmas. Come in to-
day and select the cloth from our as-
wortment of elegant and exclusive fabrics
from the very best mills. The cost
will not be unreasonable. And our
reputation is a guarantee that the
style and tailoring will be irreproach-
able.
G. L.Wild Company
Leading Merchant Tailor State S

New D(
Lohe n
Schw
The
All Pop
ALLM
one 1692

111'11n1 III tliI1I lIluIlinuI11111In uI llulIllIllillall1IllUltllIIP.
ecember Records Now On Sale.
igrin, Mein Lieber
an-Die Meistersinger
Mammy's Coal Black Rose
Base Ball Game By Weber & Fields
ular Dance Double Disc Records $1.00.
ENDINGER MUSIC SHOP
122 B. Liberty St.
1liii111111111111i 1111H111111H11i 1111111I Ii 1N111U1U111!11111tHlii 3

C1,A A
Official newspaper at the University of
MiV..gan. Published every morning except
M Aday during the university year.
Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as
second-class matter.
G : AM r ?r Building. Sub-
~iit~os:by tamrer, $a.Se; by mail, $ oo.
t .s :"tuarry's udentsS
plyStoe-The Delta, cor. State and Packard.
nes: Business, 960; Editorial, 2414.
Communications not to exceed 3o. words
in length, or notices of events will be pub-
lisked in The Daily, at the discretion of the
ditor, if left at the office in the Ann Arbor
Press Bldg., or in the notice box in the west
corridor of the general library, where the
noticed are collected at 7:3. o'elock each
John C. B. Parker..........Managing Editor
Clarence T. Fishleigh..B...Business Manager
Conrad N. Church.............News Editor
Lee U. Joslyn............... .City Editor
Harold A. Fitzgerald....... Sports Editor
harold C. L. Jackson. Telegraph Editor
Verne E. Burnett...........Associate editor
Golda Ginsburg............Women's Editor
Carleton W. Reade........Statistical Editor.
Marian Wilson.............Literary Editor
E. Campbell...Assistant Business Manager
.Philip Emery. Assistant Business Manager
Albert E. Herne..Assistant Business Manager
Roscoe R. Rau....Assistant Business Manager
Fred M. Sutter... Assistant Business Manager
Night Editors
J. L StaekerE. L. Zeigler
C. M. tickling H. M. Carey
B. A. Swaney L. W. Nieter
L. S. Thompson E. A. Baumgarth
W. A. Atlas Allen Shoenfield
H. C. Garrison C. L. Roeser
C. W. Neumann T. F. McAllister
C. S. Clark D. S. Rood
R. H. Fricken G. O. Brophy
B. L. IMillar F. A. Taber
D. (H. Cruttenden M. C. Mighell
K. L. Wehmeyer J. P. Hart
A. L. Wood
Business Staff
Bernard Weh BJ. . Robinson
Paul E. Cholette Harry R. Louis
Harold Makinson Earl F. Ganschow
Walter R. Payne Wmu. M_ LeFevre
Don M. Lillie Seymour B. Wilson
Jackson W. Smart
SATURDAY, DECEMBNR 2, 1916.
Night Editor-C. W. Neumann.

823
That is the telephone number.
Call any time between the hours
of 3 and 6 P. m. daily or between
9 and 12 A. M. Saturday when
von desire student help-"Y"
Employment Dept.

r: ll lllhIlX lllIllll Iill lii1 i 111 11aiti 11 1 1 1111 lini ili ii Ii
= VNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES -
ET sorne folks changed their
beeismt~c wit 'go
of thch m ~n ors' fl
rA n wig' ry idba-pass c
ryour M ' VELVET.
....t.G.M

--------------

A most welcome CHRISTMAS GIFT
G. Wells.$
"Mr. Britting Sees it Throujgh"
rhe Slater Book Shop
mome 430 556 S. Stat. St.

STOP AT
[UTTLE'S
338 3. STATE
or sodas and lunches
EORGE BISCHOFF
7LOR IST
nice Cut Flowers and Plants
Ch pn St. Ann Arbor, Mich.
PHONE 809 M

GIRLS! buy tickets at Beauty Shop and
save $1.50 on $5.oo. Souvenir with
every 50c purchase of cosmetics.
Miss Mable Rowe
503 First National Bank Bldg. Phone 40
FIRST NAIL BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH.
Capital $10oooo Surplus and Profit $65,ooo
DIRECTORS
Wirt Cornwell Waldo M. Abbott
Geo. W. Patterson Harry M. Hawley
S. W. Clarkson Harrison Soule
Fred Schiid D. B. Sutton
E. D. Kinnie

URGE CUT INSUNDAY PAPERS
Trade Board Makes Recommendation
to Conserve Paper
Supply
Washington, D. C., Dec. 1-Reduc-
tion in the size of Sunday newspapers
as a means of conserving the news
print paper supply of the country and
possibly preventing the suspension of
small newspapers was recommended
in a letter sent recently by the fed-
eral trade commission to all the pub-
lishers of large Sunday newspapers
in the United States.
"In connection with its investiga-
tion of news print prices," the letter,
says, "the commission has given seri-
ous consideration to possible means
of preventing the suspension of papers
because of the increasing scarcity and
advancing prices. The present situ-
ation can only be alleviated by in-
creasing the output or reducing con-
sumption.
"The commission has conferred with
a number of prominent publishers,

FRESH HOME MADE
2 Vanilla and Chocolate
CREAM WALNUT CAR AMELS
Vanilla and Maple
CREAM WALNUT FUDGE
SEA FOAM KISSES
,;. and all kinds of Chocolate Bon Bons' Chocolate Nut Meats
The Fountain of Youth
State Street Cor. Liberty
. i1111111111111 luIR11f I 1Il llllllllillillllll ll illl lillllilll lllllll lillillllH89'"

Students! Get. Your

indow Cards, Stationery, etc.

O F

DAVIS &
PROMPT

ne 432-J

OHLINGER
PRINTERS
1e9-111 E. Washington, 2nd floor
I.

%JiWRITE1RS of all makes
Le or Rent. Cleaning &
>airing. TYPEWRITING &
EOGRAPHING. SUPPLIES
0. D Mori 1

4

lNnterco~C§Igatcj

S. State

582-J

Zeeves Facts
'laim Not True"
r, The Michigan Daily:-
.r issue of November 29 says,
es claims fact not true." I have
ed a good' many things, but
. I hope, that a fact isn't true.
aay not know what the fact is,
isk, as Pilate did, "What is
?" but one may not 'claim that
isn't true. Certainly I don't.
t the headline around to read
es facts claim not true." This
fit the article, perhaps, and
also follow the well-known,
icy of headline writers to turn
tly good nouns into bad verbs.
ice versa.
J. S. REEVES.
lie Students' Club to Dance
Catholic Students' club will
i dance this afternon from 2:30
0 o'clock at Packard academy.
Thomas J MacKavanaugh, as-
t professor of electrical engi-
g. and Mrs. MacKavanaugh will
e chaperons. This is the first
of a series of entertainments
ances, which will be given dur-
e coming year.

Illinois: The board of trustees of the
University of Illinois is asking a $6,-
000,000 appropriation from the legis-
lature for the purpose of launching
a building campaign to extend over
a period of ten years. Among the
buildings are a health service and a
new gymnasium.
Ohio State University: A new song
book of Ohio State University songs
has been published by a committee
of students and an extensive cam-
paign is being carried on to dispose
of the remainder of the first edition
of 2,000 copies.
Cornell: The Cornell Daily Sun of
Nov. 20, was published under dif-
ficulties, a $150,000 fire in the neigh-
borhood having cut off its necessary
supply of electrical power. Only
four pages were printed in place of
the usual eight.
Harvard: Harvard doesn't believe in
giving the students who loyally sup-
port the sending of the banld to Yale
any real value for their money. In
place of a band bounce or similar en-,
tertainment, carnations and hand-,
kerchiefs were sold.
Oklahoma University: Oklahoma has
just completed a wireless station
which will be ready for active ser-
vice in about a week. Its chief use
is to be to get weather reports.
Yale: Two students, sons of wealthy
Chicago parents, who left New Hav-
en, Nov. 4, after notifying their fam-
ilies that they were going out to
seek their fortunes without the ben-
efit of family influence, have turned
up in a lumber camp in the Canadian
northwest. Their fathers have fol-
lowed them to attempt to bring then
back.
Lectures on Religious Life of Hindus
Dr. N. S. Hardikar, grad., gave an
illustrated lecture yesterday at Han-
over, Michigan, on "The Religious Life
of a Hindu." The lecture was given
under the auspices of the University
extension service and compared the
ancient life of the Hindus with that
of today.
Librarian Speaks in Grand Rapids
Mr. W. W. Bishop, chief librarian of
the University, spoke in the Grand
Rapids public library y st.4a7 0
"Roman Church Mosaics." The lecture
was on the University .extension pro-
gram.

TRY THE REMODELED GYM
Waterman gymnasium, remodeled
and with increased facilities, will be
opened to the campus on Monday. To,
the student who has sat, cold and
sodden on the bleachers at Ferry
Field, Saturday afternoons, during the
past eight weeks, or has spent Sun-
days in a close, smoke-filled room, the
gym offers a much needed opportunity.
Go over to the gym and shiver for
a while in your track suit. Then
warm up on the horizontal bar, until
your flabby muscles protest at the un-
accustomed treatment. Shoot through
the air on one of the flying rings. Take
a run on the track and discover that
you have lungs. The shower bath
that follows will make you feel as the
Greek gods looked.
Try this recipe for a few weeks. It
will put the health service out of
business. That brain of yours that
never had an idea will run like a
dynamo. That mountain of mid-se-
mesters will appear more like an ant-
hill. Time has not altered the old
ideal of a healthy mind in a healthy
body.
INDEPENDENT GIRLS' CLUB
TO WELCOME NEW MEMBERS
The Independent Girls' club will
welcome its new members at a party
given in their honor Monday evening
in Barbour gymnasium. Dancing,
cards, and a special entertainment by
the executive board will afford fun
for the crowd.
Before the party there will be an
important business meeting. Girls
who have not paid their dues or signed
membership cards, will be given an
opportunity to do so at this time. All
independent girls in the University are
cordially invited to this party, whether
they are club members or not.
PROMINENT MEN HELP BUY
FAMOUS LINCOLN PORTRAIT
Prominent men throughout the
country have become interested in the
campaign to raise by popular sub-
scription the amount necessary to
purchase from Oscar Marshall a fam-
ous portrait of Lincoln. It is the in-
tention of the Marshall Lincoln Mem-
orial association to present the por-
trait to the nation, to be hung in the
White House on Lincoln's birthday,
1917. Among the recent contributors
reported are J. P. Morgan, Simon
Guggenheim, William Barnes, Levi P.
Morgan and W. H. Marshall.
Give Pumpkin Pie Social Saturday
An old-fashioned pumpkin pie so-
cial will be given in the parlors of
the Congregational church at 8
o'clock Saturday night. Stunts are
being planned and all students are
cordially invited. Nine cents admis-
sion will be charged.
You have not shoppd
Unless you have stopped
At the James Foster House or Art. tf

who are of the opinion that there is
still an opportunity to effect a con-
siderable reduction in consumption by
cutting down the size of Sunday news-
papers. They feel that the elimina-
tion of certain features would meet
with public approval and would not
decrease the revenues of the pub-
lishers.
"The commission asks your cooper-
ation in this matter, and would like
to know your attitude toward this
proposition. The commission would
also appreciate any suggestions that
occur to you regarding practical ways
of making this proposal effective."
Upper Peninsula Club Plans Smoker
The Upper Peninsula club is plan-
ning a smoker to be held before the
holiday vacation to discuss the pos-
sibility of a special train home.

i

w

i

PHONE 294

Member of Florists' Telegraph
Delivery Service
Flowers by Wire to All the World.

213 E.I

L A N D E R S
FOR
FLOWERS

Liberty St.

THREE DAYS UNTIL
MICHIGANENSIAN SUBSCRIPTION
CAMPAIGN. SAVE 50 CENTS

x f .-.

The leather heel has outlived its usefulness. It is
doomed!l Hard, nail-studded leather heels are not,
adapted to the pavements of this "Concrete Age."
The impact of heel on stone wears down the leather
heel in two or three weeks. The constant jarring caused
by leather heels hurts your nervous system.
Save your heels, your shoes, and yourself by wearing
O'Sullivan's Heels of New Live Rubber.
They last twice as long as leather heels and keep your
shoes in shape much longer.

U Takes Pictures
Develops Films
I makes Prints
and Enlarge-
713 E. UIoVEoRSITY
DETROIT UNITEI) LINES
Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson
Cars run on Eastern time, one hour faster
than local time.
Detroit Limited and Express Cars-8:Io a
mn. and hourly to 7 :10o).p. n,°9:1io p. in,
Kalamazoo Limited Cars- 8:48 a. m. and
every two hours to 6:48 p. in.; to Lansing,
8:48 p."
Jackson Express Cars-(Local stops west of
Ann Arbor)- 9:48 a. in. and every two hours
to 7:48 p. mn.
Local Cars Eastbound-5 :35 a. m , 6:40 a.
m., 7:05 a. m. and every two hours to 7:05 p.
M., 8:os p. in., 9:05 p. in.,10o :50p. m. to
Ypsilanti only, 9:2o a. In., 9.50 a. in., 2: 05P
tn., 6:o5 P. in., I I :45 P. im., i :10 a. In., x :ac
a. m. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars Westbound---6:o5 a. m., 7 :50 a,
M., 10:20 p. m.. 12:20 a. In.
We Offer You
SECURITY - - SERVICE - - LOCATION
Resources $3,8oo,ooo
Ann Arbor Savings Bak
Incorporated 1869
Main Office--
Northwest Corner Main and Huron
Branch Office--
707 North University Ave.
The Farmers & Mechanics Bank
Offers the Best in Modern Banking
SECURtITY - - - EFFICIENCY
Convenient and Pleasant (Qarters. You Will
Be Pleased With Our Service. Two Offices
101-105 S. Main St. : 330 S. State St.
THE SUGAR BOWL
109 S. Main St.
SPECIAL SUNDAES
LIGHT LUNCHES
Our candies are made in
our own sanitary shop.

WLfomen

trd of directors for the Women's
ue rmieets at 8:30 o'clock this
ing in Barbour gymnasium.
acutive board of the Independent
club meets at 9 o'clock in Bar-
gymnasium.
e beginning class in aesthetic
ng which meets at 4 o'clock on'
lays will not be divided.
3lee club rehearsal will be held
0 o'clock this afternoon.
s Evans and Miss Wood will
a reception for Miss Dawley on
day, Dec. 9, from 2:30 to ."'30.
nlversity girls are invited.
THREE DAYS UNTIL
IGANENSIAN SUBSCRIPTION
MPAIGN. SAVE 50 CENTS

When you buy your new shoes,
buy them O'Sullivanized.
Insist on O'Sullivanized shoes; the
new live rubber heels give the
greatest wear with the greatest re-
siliency.
CoAYrfrAt 1916. O'S. R. Co.
-- - ---- CZ

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STRAND
N9 505 BLK. N? 605 TAN

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